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Wikipedia

Jordan Williams (New Zealand lawyer)

Jordan Henry Williams (born 1986) is New Zealand lawyer best known for his political activities, which are often connected to the National or ACT parties, and his lobbying for liberal and conservative causes.[1] He is a founder and current Executive Director of the New Zealand Taxpayers' Union,[2] President of the World Taxpayers' Association,[3] a New Zealand Free Speech Union co-founder and Council Member,[4] and the Chief Executive Officer and sole director of the Campaign Company.[5][6]

In the second half of the 2010s a lengthy defamation dispute between Williams and former Conservative Party leader Colin Craig reached the Supreme Court. Williams was initially awarded a New Zealand record amount of $1.27M (overturned on appeal), but ended up issuing an apology and making an undisclosed payment to Craig in a negotiated settlement.

Early life and education edit

Williams grew up in Hawkes Bay, attended Lindisfarne College, and was a member of the Hastings Youth Council. When he was 15 years-old, Williams joined the New Zealand Green Party, motivated by a fear of genetic engineering.[7]

While studying law and accounting at Victoria University of Wellington he interned for family friend Don Brash (National Party leader 2003–2006), and in 2008 he was involved in former ACT MP Stephen Franks' election campaign as a National Party candidate. This led to him working at Franks' law firm, Franks & Ogilvie, for four years.[8]

Dirty Politics and Vote For Change edit

At 25 years old, Williams was a leading spokesman for Vote For Change, the main group that unsuccessfully campaigned against MMP in the 2011 New Zealand voting system referendum.[9] Williams attended a New Zealand First party rally where Winston Peters dismissed Vote For Change as "a National Party jack-up".[10]

Also in 2011 Williams assisted Don Brash's takeover of the ACT party leadership. At the time he described his work as a short-term legal assignment.[11] In 2014, Nicky Hager's book Dirty Politics alleged that Williams had been involved in blackmailing Rodney Hide to stand down in favour of Brash. As told in the book, Williams' role was to obtain "dodgy texts" that Hide had allegedly sent to a young woman. Both Williams and Hide denied the story.[12]

Dirty Politics was based mostly on emails hacked from "attack-blogger" Cameron Slater, who ran the blog WhaleOil. Its main theme was secret collaboration between National Party figures including Judith Collins and Slater. Williams was included in three separate exchanges covered in the book, and Hager later characterised him as an "enthusiastic helper, ready to help dig dirt on the latest target".[13][14]

After the book came out Williams said that he and Slater still spoke "every day", but that he had fallen out with another of the key players, political strategist Simon Lusk.[12]

Taxpayers' Union edit

In 2013, Williams and David Farrar founded the New Zealand Taxpayers' Union as an incorporated society.[15]

To draw attention to public spending that the Taxpayers' Union considered wasteful, a series of publicity stunts featured Williams, dressed in a black suit and bowtie, and a second person wearing a full-body costume in the style of Porky Pig. Williams and "Porky" would visit government entities and film themselves attempting to present awards such as a "Waste Watch" certificate to MBIE and a "certificate of achievement and imagination" to a bemused middle manager at the Rotorua Lakes District Council.[15][16]

As a Taxpayer Union spokesman Williams has opposed raising the minimum wage,[17] workplace safety training,[18] broadcast funding for The Civilian Party,[19] tobacco tax increases (a position that the Taxpayers' Union took without declaring its tobacco industry relationships),[20][21] the Low Emission Vehicles Contestable Fund,[22] Māori wards in local government,[23] and the Three Waters reforms.[24]

Williams is Chairman and President of the World Taxpayers' Association, which describes itself as an organisation that connects organisations like New Zealand's Taxpayers' Union from over 60 countries. He was first elected to its Board in 2019.[3]

NZME publications including the New Zealand Herald have carried occasional opinion columns by Williams since 2017. Writing mostly about politics, tax and spending, his articles variously declared his interest as Chief Executive of the Taxpayers' Union, or only as "a Wellington-based lawyer, lobbyist and commentator".[25][26][27]

Auckland Ratepayers' Alliance edit

Williams founded the Auckland Ratepayers' Alliance as a company in 2015, using the Taxpayers' Union in Wellington as its registered office address.[15][28]

Williams moderated a Ratepayers' Alliance candidate debate during the 2019 Auckland mayoral election.[29] For the 2022 civic elections Williams simultaneously ran the Ratepayers' Alliance, which commented (often negatively) about various candidates' policies, and worked on multiple mayoral election campaigns. He denied that this situation created any conflicts of interest.[30]

Williams owned the Ratepayers' Alliance company until it was wound up in 2021, with its activities being absorbed into the Taxpayers' Union.[31]

Free Speech Union edit

In 2018 Williams was a co-founder of the Free Speech Coalition, which later renamed itself the Free Speech Union (FSU).The group's initial motivation was to overturn Mayor of Auckland Phil Goff's cancellation of an event featuring alt-right speakers Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux at an council-owned venue. Their challenges were unsuccessful in both the High Court and the Court of Appeal.[32][33][34] Williams remains a board Member of the Free Speech Union.[35]

In March 2021 the FSU registered as a union under the Employment Relations Act.[36] In the 2021–22 year covered by its first annual report as a union, the FSU made three submissions to Parliament – against "safe zone" legislation that prohibits protest near abortion service providers,[37] against aspects of the bill prohibiting conversion therapy,[38] and against a bill strengthening plain language practices within the Government.[39]

The Campaign Company edit

Williams is the founder, owner, and Chief Executive of the Campaign Company, a digital agency.[6][5] The Campaign Company's clients include Groundswell NZ[5] and Don Brash's lobby group, Hobson's Pledge.[40][41] It has faced multiple accusations of astroturfing.

During the 2022 Auckland mayoral election the Campaign Company worked for two candidates – Leo Molloy and Viv Beck.[42] The company's working relationship with Molloy ended after the Auckland Ratepayers' Alliance (also run by Williams) criticised him in a full page newspaper ad.[43]

The Campaign Company runs a number of campaign websites on behalf of Hobson's Pledge, including We Belong Aotearoa which disguises its association with the group. It uses Māori proverbs like "whiria te tāngata" ("weave the people together"), stock images of people from a range of cultural backgrounds, and even a Dame Whina Cooper photo and quote, to oppose co-governance ("a legal concept of shared management" which includes Māori representation) without mentioning the term. Because Hobson's Pledge lobbies against the use of te reo Māori and the name "Aotearoa" in particular, the "We Belong Aotearoa" site was called offensive, insulting, and deceitful by cultural advisor Dr Karaitiana Taiuru. Dylan Reeve, author of Fake Believe: Conspiracy Theories in Aotearoa, called the campaign an example of astroturfing – a fake grassroots group.[40]

Another Campaign Company website, Save Our Stores, was designed to look like a grassroots campaign organised by small retailers against the Smokefree 2025 Act.[44] It was found to be funded by British American Tobacco and Imperial Brands, and its message was disavowed by the 6000-member Dairy and Business Owners Group.[40] Another of William's vehicles, the Taxpayers' Union, has also taken pro-tobacco positions while accepting funding from the tobacco industry.[20][45]

Colin Craig defamation case edit

Shortly after the 2014 New Zealand general election Rachel MacGregor, who had resigned as Conservative Party leader Colin Craig's press secretary late in the campaign, confided in Williams that Craig had sexually harassed her. MacGregor and Craig reached a confidential settlement in 2015.[46]

Williams promised MacGregor and her lawyer to keep this information, and documents that she shared with him, private. He then used the information to persuade the party's board to end Craig's leadership, and in articles he wrote under a pseudonym ("Concerned Conservative") on right-wing blog WhaleOil. A judge later described these actions as a "campaign" against Craig. Williams said that he acted in MacGregor's defence after Craig breached the confidentiality he'd promised her.[47]

Craig responded with a pamphlet that was delivered to 1.6 million homes and claimed that he had been defamed. He said that Williams was lying, and that he would sue Williams and others. Williams consequently sued Craig for defaming him in the pamphlet. Among a number of witnesses called by Craig, Martyn "Bomber" Bradbury gave evidence of Williams' character, describing him as "manipulative", a "political sadist" and like "a venomous spider".[48] In this initial case Williams was awarded a record $1.27 million, which was later found to be excessive. A series of appeals from both sides followed and the case reached the Supreme Court.[49]

In December 2019, after more than four years of legal action, Williams and Craig settled. Williams issued an apology and agreed to make an undisclosed payment to Craig. Part of Williams' apology said, "I am now aware that a number of statements I made to others about Mr Craig were not true. I deeply regret what has happened and my involvement in spreading those allegations. I apologise to Mr Craig and his family unreservedly."[50]

The public reaction to the case included sympathy for MacGregor, who gave evidence in multiple cases that she had neither brought nor was defending, and condemnation of both Williams and Craig.[51][52] Details of Craig's behaviour towards MacGregor had not been public until they were presented as evidence by Williams, and she told the High Court that she felt "on trial by proxy" and "didn't want to be part of...this, their defamation thing, two men angry about something."[46][53] Williams summed up reporting of the long-running case as "who do you despise more, the neoliberal prick [Williams] or the conservative monster [Craig]?"[46]

References edit

  1. ^ "Registry Lookup: Jordan Henry Williams". New Zealand Law Society. 24 June 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  2. ^ "Our team". New Zealand Taxpayers' Union. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Jordan Williams – Chairman & President". World Taxpayers' Association. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  4. ^ "About". Free Speech Union. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "Sponsored Story: How to build a 'force for good'". New Zealand Herald. 5 July 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  6. ^ a b "The Campaign Company Limited (8257633) Registered". Companies Register (New Zealand Companies Office). Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  7. ^ Gullery, Lawrence (5 March 2012). "Ex youth leader says get elected". New Zealand Herald/Hawkes Bay Today. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  8. ^ Macdonald, Nikki (3 February 2016). "National portrait: Taxpayers' Union founder Jordan Williams". Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  9. ^ Vote For Change (27 June 2011). "Press Release: Vote for Change Campaign Launched". Scoop. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  10. ^ Levy, Danya (23 November 2011). "Peters wants old-fashioned politics back". Stuff. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  11. ^ Cheng, Derek (6 May 2011). "Brash's Act coup angers some National members". New Zealand Herald.
  12. ^ a b Fox, Michael; Rutherford, Hamish (14 August 2014). "Hide scoffs at blackmail claim". Stuff. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  13. ^ Hager, Nicky (16 August 2017). "Sunlight did what sunlight does: Nicky Hager on Dirty Politics, three years on". The Spinoff. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  14. ^ Fisher, David (14 August 2014). "Dirty Politics: Who are the key players?". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  15. ^ a b c Fisher, David (13 November 2015). "The Big Read: So what's this Taxpayers' Union, which purports to represent us all?". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  16. ^ Martin, Matthew (31 July 2017). "Rotorua council given dubious award for muddy spending". Rotorua Daily Post/New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  17. ^ Mackenzie, Dene (25 January 2017). "Minimum wage rise draws widespread criticism". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  18. ^ Mackenzie, Dene (15 January 2014). "Accident prevention training may end". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  19. ^ Bennett, Adam (11 June 2014). "Civilian's gain major parties' loss". Otago Daily Times. APNZ. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  20. ^ a b Sachdeva, Sam (24 January 2019). "Taxpayers' Union backed by tobacco giant". Stuff. Newsroom. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  21. ^ Mackenzie, Dene (27 May 2016). "The more people smoke, the more they pay". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  22. ^ Mackenzie, Dene (18 January 2018). "Taxpayers' Union takes issue with electric-vehicle funding". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  23. ^ Harawira, Tumamao (5 February 2021). "Tau Henare criticises Taxpayers' Union petition opposing Māori wards". Te Ao Māori News. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  24. ^ "Three Waters on the road". Local Matters. 20 June 2022. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  25. ^ Williams, Jordan (29 November 2017). "Golriz Ghahraman saga reveals Greens in-fighting". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  26. ^ Williams, Jordan (22 May 2017). "Jordan Williams: Never a better time for tax relief". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  27. ^ Williams, Jordan (24 November 2022). "Christopher Luxon wrong to U-turn on tax policy". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
  28. ^ "New Company Incorporation – AUCKLAND RATEPAYERS' ALLIANCE LIMITED". Companies Register. New Zealand Companies Office. 15 June 2015. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  29. ^ Donnell, Hayden (2 October 2019). "Auckland's penny-pinching rates protesters find a new hero". The Spinoff. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  30. ^ Niall, Todd (26 July 2022). "Auckland mayoralty: Taxpayers' Union head says his various roles don't conflict". Stuff. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  31. ^ Niall, Todd (7 March 2022). "Taxpayers' Union society wrongly listed as 'dissolved' after alleged hack". Stuff. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  32. ^ Van Dongen, Yvonne (October 2022). "Voice Control". North and South. pp. 24–33. from the original on 27 October 2022. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  33. ^ Weekes, John (4 August 2020). "Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux: 'Thugs' veto' canned visit, court told". Stuff. from the original on 23 November 2021. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  34. ^ Niall, Tony (25 July 2018). "Right-wing Canadian speakers' visit canned, legal action on back burner". Stuff. from the original on 22 December 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  35. ^ "About". Free Speech Union. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  36. ^ "Application for society to register as a union (completed copy)". fyi.org.nz. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  37. ^ Giraud, Dane (6 May 2023). "Free Speech Union's submission on the Contraception, Sterilisation, and Abortion (Safe Areas) Amendment Bill". Free Speech Union. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  38. ^ "Free Speech Union Submission on the Conversion Therapy Practices Prohibition Bill". Free Speech Union. 1 September 2021. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  39. ^ "Annual Report 2022 (PDF)" (PDF). Free Speech Union. Retrieved 1 September 2023.
  40. ^ a b c Hancock, Farah (31 August 2023). "'Astroturf' accusations over 'We Belong' website run by anti co-governance group". RNZ. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  41. ^ "webelong.co.nz (Active)". Domain Name Commission. Retrieved 16 August 2023. webelong.co.nz Registrant contact: Campaign Company, 17/125 Queen Street, Auckland 1010
  42. ^ Fisher, David (24 August 2022). "Auckland mayoral candidate Viv Beck locked out of online campaign after unpaid bill". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  43. ^ Morton, Nathan; Niall, Todd (5 August 2022). "Leo Molloy's media manager exits Auckland Mayoralty campaign team". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  44. ^ Hancock, Farah (7 August 2023). "'Save our stores': The 'corner dairy campaign' quietly backed by big tobacco". New Zealand Herald. RNZ. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  45. ^ Dairy and Business Owners Group (8 August 2023). "Press Release: 'Save Our Stores' Isn't Us". Scoop. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  46. ^ a b c Emanuel, Asher (6 September 2018). "'Who do you despise more?' Jordan Williams and Colin Craig at the Supreme Court". The Spinoff. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  47. ^ Brown, Jacob (30 September 2016). "Jury finds Colin Craig did defame Jordan Williams". Newshub. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  48. ^ Denney, Kelly (23 September 2016). "Taxpayers Union founder Jordan Williams' courtroom rant". Stuff. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  49. ^ Robson, Sarah (11 April 2019). "Jordan Williams defamation case against Colin Craig: Retrial ordered by Supreme Court". RNZ. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  50. ^ Williams, Jordan (3 December 2019). "Press Release: Calling it quits with Colin Craig". Scoop. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  51. ^ Toy-Cronin, Bridgette (4 October 2019). "Not easy to end Craig's legal omnishambles". Newsroom. Retrieved 22 August 2023. McGregor…was hoping the High Court case was the final outcome. The prospect of the saga continuing is particularly painful when one considers that the High Court case took a long time. Two years elapsed between McGregor being served with the proceedings and the judgment being delivered, and there was a whole year between McGregor going to court to give evidence and then reviewing the judgment. That is a problem in itself.
  52. ^ Manhire, Toby (30 September 2016). "Having trounced Colin Craig in comedy-horror libel case, here's how Jordan Williams could spend his $1.27m". The Spinoff. Retrieved 23 August 2023. But while there was plenty of reason to sympathise with MacGregor, it's difficult to see how anyone reading the reports of the trial would be feeling enamoured by either of these unpleasant men who seemed set upon slapping each other with legal fish
  53. ^ Dennett, Kelly (6 September 2016). "Sexual harassment allegations against Colin Craig detailed for first time". Stuff. Retrieved 22 August 2023.

jordan, williams, zealand, lawyer, jordan, henry, williams, born, 1986, zealand, lawyer, best, known, political, activities, which, often, connected, national, parties, lobbying, liberal, conservative, causes, founder, current, executive, director, zealand, ta. Jordan Henry Williams born 1986 is New Zealand lawyer best known for his political activities which are often connected to the National or ACT parties and his lobbying for liberal and conservative causes 1 He is a founder and current Executive Director of the New Zealand Taxpayers Union 2 President of the World Taxpayers Association 3 a New Zealand Free Speech Union co founder and Council Member 4 and the Chief Executive Officer and sole director of the Campaign Company 5 6 In the second half of the 2010s a lengthy defamation dispute between Williams and former Conservative Party leader Colin Craig reached the Supreme Court Williams was initially awarded a New Zealand record amount of 1 27M overturned on appeal but ended up issuing an apology and making an undisclosed payment to Craig in a negotiated settlement Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Dirty Politics and Vote For Change 3 Taxpayers Union 3 1 Auckland Ratepayers Alliance 4 Free Speech Union 5 The Campaign Company 6 Colin Craig defamation case 7 ReferencesEarly life and education editWilliams grew up in Hawkes Bay attended Lindisfarne College and was a member of the Hastings Youth Council When he was 15 years old Williams joined the New Zealand Green Party motivated by a fear of genetic engineering 7 While studying law and accounting at Victoria University of Wellington he interned for family friend Don Brash National Party leader 2003 2006 and in 2008 he was involved in former ACT MP Stephen Franks election campaign as a National Party candidate This led to him working at Franks law firm Franks amp Ogilvie for four years 8 Dirty Politics and Vote For Change editAt 25 years old Williams was a leading spokesman for Vote For Change the main group that unsuccessfully campaigned against MMP in the 2011 New Zealand voting system referendum 9 Williams attended a New Zealand First party rally where Winston Peters dismissed Vote For Change as a National Party jack up 10 Also in 2011 Williams assisted Don Brash s takeover of the ACT party leadership At the time he described his work as a short term legal assignment 11 In 2014 Nicky Hager s book Dirty Politics alleged that Williams had been involved in blackmailing Rodney Hide to stand down in favour of Brash As told in the book Williams role was to obtain dodgy texts that Hide had allegedly sent to a young woman Both Williams and Hide denied the story 12 Dirty Politics was based mostly on emails hacked from attack blogger Cameron Slater who ran the blog WhaleOil Its main theme was secret collaboration between National Party figures including Judith Collins and Slater Williams was included in three separate exchanges covered in the book and Hager later characterised him as an enthusiastic helper ready to help dig dirt on the latest target 13 14 After the book came out Williams said that he and Slater still spoke every day but that he had fallen out with another of the key players political strategist Simon Lusk 12 Taxpayers Union editIn 2013 Williams and David Farrar founded the New Zealand Taxpayers Union as an incorporated society 15 To draw attention to public spending that the Taxpayers Union considered wasteful a series of publicity stunts featured Williams dressed in a black suit and bowtie and a second person wearing a full body costume in the style of Porky Pig Williams and Porky would visit government entities and film themselves attempting to present awards such as a Waste Watch certificate to MBIE and a certificate of achievement and imagination to a bemused middle manager at the Rotorua Lakes District Council 15 16 As a Taxpayer Union spokesman Williams has opposed raising the minimum wage 17 workplace safety training 18 broadcast funding for The Civilian Party 19 tobacco tax increases a position that the Taxpayers Union took without declaring its tobacco industry relationships 20 21 the Low Emission Vehicles Contestable Fund 22 Maori wards in local government 23 and the Three Waters reforms 24 Williams is Chairman and President of the World Taxpayers Association which describes itself as an organisation that connects organisations like New Zealand s Taxpayers Union from over 60 countries He was first elected to its Board in 2019 3 NZME publications including the New Zealand Herald have carried occasional opinion columns by Williams since 2017 Writing mostly about politics tax and spending his articles variously declared his interest as Chief Executive of the Taxpayers Union or only as a Wellington based lawyer lobbyist and commentator 25 26 27 Auckland Ratepayers Alliance edit Williams founded the Auckland Ratepayers Alliance as a company in 2015 using the Taxpayers Union in Wellington as its registered office address 15 28 Williams moderated a Ratepayers Alliance candidate debate during the 2019 Auckland mayoral election 29 For the 2022 civic elections Williams simultaneously ran the Ratepayers Alliance which commented often negatively about various candidates policies and worked on multiple mayoral election campaigns He denied that this situation created any conflicts of interest 30 Williams owned the Ratepayers Alliance company until it was wound up in 2021 with its activities being absorbed into the Taxpayers Union 31 Free Speech Union editIn 2018 Williams was a co founder of the Free Speech Coalition which later renamed itself the Free Speech Union FSU The group s initial motivation was to overturn Mayor of Auckland Phil Goff s cancellation of an event featuring alt right speakers Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux at an council owned venue Their challenges were unsuccessful in both the High Court and the Court of Appeal 32 33 34 Williams remains a board Member of the Free Speech Union 35 In March 2021 the FSU registered as a union under the Employment Relations Act 36 In the 2021 22 year covered by its first annual report as a union the FSU made three submissions to Parliament against safe zone legislation that prohibits protest near abortion service providers 37 against aspects of the bill prohibiting conversion therapy 38 and against a bill strengthening plain language practices within the Government 39 The Campaign Company editWilliams is the founder owner and Chief Executive of the Campaign Company a digital agency 6 5 The Campaign Company s clients include Groundswell NZ 5 and Don Brash s lobby group Hobson s Pledge 40 41 It has faced multiple accusations of astroturfing During the 2022 Auckland mayoral election the Campaign Company worked for two candidates Leo Molloy and Viv Beck 42 The company s working relationship with Molloy ended after the Auckland Ratepayers Alliance also run by Williams criticised him in a full page newspaper ad 43 The Campaign Company runs a number of campaign websites on behalf of Hobson s Pledge including We Belong Aotearoa which disguises its association with the group It uses Maori proverbs like whiria te tangata weave the people together stock images of people from a range of cultural backgrounds and even a Dame Whina Cooper photo and quote to oppose co governance a legal concept of shared management which includes Maori representation without mentioning the term Because Hobson s Pledge lobbies against the use of te reo Maori and the name Aotearoa in particular the We Belong Aotearoa site was called offensive insulting and deceitful by cultural advisor Dr Karaitiana Taiuru Dylan Reeve author of Fake Believe Conspiracy Theories in Aotearoa called the campaign an example of astroturfing a fake grassroots group 40 Another Campaign Company website Save Our Stores was designed to look like a grassroots campaign organised by small retailers against the Smokefree 2025 Act 44 It was found to be funded by British American Tobacco and Imperial Brands and its message was disavowed by the 6000 member Dairy and Business Owners Group 40 Another of William s vehicles the Taxpayers Union has also taken pro tobacco positions while accepting funding from the tobacco industry 20 45 Colin Craig defamation case editShortly after the 2014 New Zealand general election Rachel MacGregor who had resigned as Conservative Party leader Colin Craig s press secretary late in the campaign confided in Williams that Craig had sexually harassed her MacGregor and Craig reached a confidential settlement in 2015 46 Williams promised MacGregor and her lawyer to keep this information and documents that she shared with him private He then used the information to persuade the party s board to end Craig s leadership and in articles he wrote under a pseudonym Concerned Conservative on right wing blog WhaleOil A judge later described these actions as a campaign against Craig Williams said that he acted in MacGregor s defence after Craig breached the confidentiality he d promised her 47 Craig responded with a pamphlet that was delivered to 1 6 million homes and claimed that he had been defamed He said that Williams was lying and that he would sue Williams and others Williams consequently sued Craig for defaming him in the pamphlet Among a number of witnesses called by Craig Martyn Bomber Bradbury gave evidence of Williams character describing him as manipulative a political sadist and like a venomous spider 48 In this initial case Williams was awarded a record 1 27 million which was later found to be excessive A series of appeals from both sides followed and the case reached the Supreme Court 49 In December 2019 after more than four years of legal action Williams and Craig settled Williams issued an apology and agreed to make an undisclosed payment to Craig Part of Williams apology said I am now aware that a number of statements I made to others about Mr Craig were not true I deeply regret what has happened and my involvement in spreading those allegations I apologise to Mr Craig and his family unreservedly 50 The public reaction to the case included sympathy for MacGregor who gave evidence in multiple cases that she had neither brought nor was defending and condemnation of both Williams and Craig 51 52 Details of Craig s behaviour towards MacGregor had not been public until they were presented as evidence by Williams and she told the High Court that she felt on trial by proxy and didn t want to be part of this their defamation thing two men angry about something 46 53 Williams summed up reporting of the long running case as who do you despise more the neoliberal prick Williams or the conservative monster Craig 46 References edit Registry Lookup Jordan Henry Williams New Zealand Law Society 24 June 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2023 Our team New Zealand Taxpayers Union Retrieved 16 August 2023 a b Jordan Williams Chairman amp President World Taxpayers Association Retrieved 29 August 2023 About Free Speech Union Retrieved 16 August 2023 a b c Sponsored Story How to build a force for good New Zealand Herald 5 July 2023 Retrieved 16 August 2023 a b The Campaign Company Limited 8257633 Registered Companies Register New Zealand Companies Office Retrieved 16 August 2023 Gullery Lawrence 5 March 2012 Ex youth leader says get elected New Zealand Herald Hawkes Bay Today Retrieved 18 August 2023 Macdonald Nikki 3 February 2016 National portrait Taxpayers Union founder Jordan Williams Retrieved 16 August 2023 Vote For Change 27 June 2011 Press Release Vote for Change Campaign Launched Scoop Retrieved 18 August 2023 Levy Danya 23 November 2011 Peters wants old fashioned politics back Stuff Retrieved 27 August 2023 Cheng Derek 6 May 2011 Brash s Act coup angers some National members New Zealand Herald a b Fox Michael Rutherford Hamish 14 August 2014 Hide scoffs at blackmail claim Stuff Retrieved 25 August 2023 Hager Nicky 16 August 2017 Sunlight did what sunlight does Nicky Hager on Dirty Politics three years on The Spinoff Retrieved 16 August 2023 Fisher David 14 August 2014 Dirty Politics Who are the key players New Zealand Herald Retrieved 16 August 2023 a b c Fisher David 13 November 2015 The Big Read So what s this Taxpayers Union which purports to represent us all New Zealand Herald Retrieved 16 August 2023 Martin Matthew 31 July 2017 Rotorua council given dubious award for muddy spending Rotorua Daily Post New Zealand Herald Retrieved 27 August 2023 Mackenzie Dene 25 January 2017 Minimum wage rise draws widespread criticism Otago Daily Times Retrieved 27 August 2023 Mackenzie Dene 15 January 2014 Accident prevention training may end Otago Daily Times Retrieved 27 August 2023 Bennett Adam 11 June 2014 Civilian s gain major parties loss Otago Daily Times APNZ Retrieved 27 August 2023 a b Sachdeva Sam 24 January 2019 Taxpayers Union backed by tobacco giant Stuff Newsroom Retrieved 27 August 2023 Mackenzie Dene 27 May 2016 The more people smoke the more they pay Otago Daily Times Retrieved 27 August 2023 Mackenzie Dene 18 January 2018 Taxpayers Union takes issue with electric vehicle funding Otago Daily Times Retrieved 27 August 2023 Harawira Tumamao 5 February 2021 Tau Henare criticises Taxpayers Union petition opposing Maori wards Te Ao Maori News Retrieved 27 August 2023 Three Waters on the road Local Matters 20 June 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2023 Williams Jordan 29 November 2017 Golriz Ghahraman saga reveals Greens in fighting New Zealand Herald Retrieved 18 August 2023 Williams Jordan 22 May 2017 Jordan Williams Never a better time for tax relief New Zealand Herald Retrieved 18 August 2023 Williams Jordan 24 November 2022 Christopher Luxon wrong to U turn on tax policy New Zealand Herald Retrieved 24 August 2023 New Company Incorporation AUCKLAND RATEPAYERS ALLIANCE LIMITED Companies Register New Zealand Companies Office 15 June 2015 Retrieved 17 August 2023 Donnell Hayden 2 October 2019 Auckland s penny pinching rates protesters find a new hero The Spinoff Retrieved 23 August 2023 Niall Todd 26 July 2022 Auckland mayoralty Taxpayers Union head says his various roles don t conflict Stuff Retrieved 23 August 2023 Niall Todd 7 March 2022 Taxpayers Union society wrongly listed as dissolved after alleged hack Stuff Retrieved 16 August 2023 Van Dongen Yvonne October 2022 Voice Control North and South pp 24 33 Archived from the original on 27 October 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2023 Weekes John 4 August 2020 Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux Thugs veto canned visit court told Stuff Archived from the original on 23 November 2021 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Niall Tony 25 July 2018 Right wing Canadian speakers visit canned legal action on back burner Stuff Archived from the original on 22 December 2019 Retrieved 23 November 2021 About Free Speech Union Retrieved 18 August 2023 Application for society to register as a union completed copy fyi org nz Retrieved 1 September 2023 Giraud Dane 6 May 2023 Free Speech Union s submission on the Contraception Sterilisation and Abortion Safe Areas Amendment Bill Free Speech Union Retrieved 1 September 2023 Free Speech Union Submission on the Conversion Therapy Practices Prohibition Bill Free Speech Union 1 September 2021 Retrieved 1 September 2023 Annual Report 2022 PDF PDF Free Speech Union Retrieved 1 September 2023 a b c Hancock Farah 31 August 2023 Astroturf accusations over We Belong website run by anti co governance group RNZ Retrieved 30 August 2023 webelong co nz Active Domain Name Commission Retrieved 16 August 2023 webelong co nz Registrant contact Campaign Company 17 125 Queen Street Auckland 1010 Fisher David 24 August 2022 Auckland mayoral candidate Viv Beck locked out of online campaign after unpaid bill New Zealand Herald Retrieved 16 August 2023 Morton Nathan Niall Todd 5 August 2022 Leo Molloy s media manager exits Auckland Mayoralty campaign team New Zealand Herald Retrieved 16 August 2023 Hancock Farah 7 August 2023 Save our stores The corner dairy campaign quietly backed by big tobacco New Zealand Herald RNZ Retrieved 30 August 2023 Dairy and Business Owners Group 8 August 2023 Press Release Save Our Stores Isn t Us Scoop Retrieved 30 August 2023 a b c Emanuel Asher 6 September 2018 Who do you despise more Jordan Williams and Colin Craig at the Supreme Court The Spinoff Retrieved 22 August 2023 Brown Jacob 30 September 2016 Jury finds Colin Craig did defame Jordan Williams Newshub Retrieved 22 August 2023 Denney Kelly 23 September 2016 Taxpayers Union founder Jordan Williams courtroom rant Stuff Retrieved 23 August 2023 Robson Sarah 11 April 2019 Jordan Williams defamation case against Colin Craig Retrial ordered by Supreme Court RNZ Retrieved 22 August 2023 Williams Jordan 3 December 2019 Press Release Calling it quits with Colin Craig Scoop Retrieved 16 August 2023 Toy Cronin Bridgette 4 October 2019 Not easy to end Craig s legal omnishambles Newsroom Retrieved 22 August 2023 McGregor was hoping the High Court case was the final outcome The prospect of the saga continuing is particularly painful when one considers that the High Court case took a long time Two years elapsed between McGregor being served with the proceedings and the judgment being delivered and there was a whole year between McGregor going to court to give evidence and then reviewing the judgment That is a problem in itself Manhire Toby 30 September 2016 Having trounced Colin Craig in comedy horror libel case here s how Jordan Williams could spend his 1 27m The Spinoff Retrieved 23 August 2023 But while there was plenty of reason to sympathise with MacGregor it s difficult to see how anyone reading the reports of the trial would be feeling enamoured by either of these unpleasant men who seemed set upon slapping each other with legal fish Dennett Kelly 6 September 2016 Sexual harassment allegations against Colin Craig detailed for first time Stuff Retrieved 22 August 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jordan Williams New Zealand lawyer amp oldid 1183593803, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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